Cyril De Jonckheere must be one of
the most-recognised and respected names in Scottish shooting.
Although not achieving his ambition of shooting in a Commonwealth
Games, Cyril has stamped his name on many championships and trophies
over the years.

However, his long-term achievement
which will put his name in the annals of Scottish shooting forever
is that he has represented Scotland more times than anyone else at
the National Meetings both at Bisley and the Scottish - both by some
margin. This includes a run of 19 successive international
matches at Bisley, itself a record - only one other Scots shooter
has more than 19 Bisley caps and he will never reach Cyril's current
total. It will take a shooter with considerable dedication and
longevity to come close to Cyril's record of representational
honours. He is third in the overall list to
Robin Law and Sheena Sharp.

Cyril was born in Wick in Caithness in 1941, and
as the grandson of an émigré and despite the name he's as Scottish as the next
man. If you've heard his voice, you won't disagree. He is one of a large
family and has nine siblings, seven sisters and two brothers. He left Wick in
1945 and was thereafter raised in Stonehaven, the fishing village just south of
Aberdeen. His family lived from the sea and its produce, and he has said that as
a child he got totally fed up with eating sea-trout!

His father and grandfather shot at the local
club, and he started shooting there aged 12. At one time G J De Jonckheere, C J
De Jonckheere and C G De Jonckheere shot in the same team. Pity the poor
scorer. He started off with a BSA 12/15 but graduated to a BSA MKII then
to a MkIII when he went to university in Aberdeen. He claims that the generous
student grant bought all his equipment! Wouldn't happen these days.
He joined the famous Aberdeen club Bon Accord in 1966 and never looked back.
Encouraged by Ian Baird and given a massive push by Adam Gordon his shooting
flourished.

His first Scottish was Nairn in 1966 and by
waiting for the gales to decrease (all shooting was unsquadded in those days),
he qualified to shoot for Scotland. As the only Bon Accord representative in
the team he felt had to shoot well to uphold the reputation of the club, and so
he did - he was second-top scorer. Not bad for a first cap. As a newcomer
to the scene and a relative stranger he was just left to himself to get on with
it (so much for team spirit), so he did his own thing, which, he says, he still
does. If it ain't broke, don't fix it, I guess.

On graduating he worked for 10 years at the Meteorological Office in
Bracknell and other places doing high atmosphere research, forecasting and
weather radar work. That included a secondment to Woomera in Australia for a
time, a trip and an experience he will never forget. He enjoyed the work
and the competitive shooting in the south. During this time he shot for St
Nicholas Rifle Club (Chiselhurst) and also Glevum (Gloucester). This writer has
been to St Nicks, and there's still a photo of Cyril on the clubhouse wall.
However he always had a hankering to return to Scotland, so he retrained as a
Physics teacher and applied for jobs in his homeland. I'm sure he would
have preferred to be in the Aberdeen area, but the only job he could get was
near Dumfries, which is about as far away from Aberdeen as you can get and still
be in Scotland. He taught at Annan Academy for 25 years until retirement
in 2002(?).

This period in England saw him make many friends
and acquaintances in the English shooting scene. There's hardly a shooter
of his generation in the UK who doesn't either know him personally, or know of
him. A definite 'character'. Once met, never forgotten.

One of his most memorable moments came in winning the A Class aggregate (the
last as the highest Class before X Class was introduced) in Aberdeen in 1970.
He knew he had to shoot 395 or better to beat the late Don Bester, who had shot
earlier, and he came off the firing point highly elated at achieving this.
His friends were too - I was watching him do it, and I still remember seeing his
first two shots at 50yds go smack in the middle!
" Incidentally,
Cyril is one of only two current shooters among those who were selected by the
NSRA to comprise the original X Class at Bisley in 1970 who are still shooting
in that Class. If anyone's interested, the other is Geoff Doe of the NSRA, whom
many readers will know of.

Cyril won the Scottish Long-Range Championship for the Earl Haig trophy three
times. He won it twice in a row in 1979 and 1980, then became one of the
oldest to win it at age 57 in 1999. He certainly has the record for the
longest time between two wins.

He qualified for the British team for the European
Championships in Pilsen, Czechoslovakia in 1969 but was overawed by the occasion
and did not shoot well. This was both a high (being selected) and a low
(shooting poorly), but his greatest disappointment came in 1973 when he was not
picked for the Scotland Commonwealth Games team for the Games in Christchurch.
That year he had been shooting very well, and had made an almost unanswerable
case for himself in the trials. However, the size of the overall shooting
party had been restricted to only seven shooters The four shooting
disciplines (smallbore rifle, fullbore rifle, pistol and shotgun) could not all
send two shooters. The choice for the last place in the party came down to
either a pistol shooter or Cyril (Alister
Allan had been virtually seeded in as the primary smallbore shooter)
The selection went the wrong way for Cyril despite strong representations on his
behalf, and it hit him very hard as he was expecting to go (and in fact
had been led to believe that he would after the trials). He was made first
reserve for the team in case anyone dropped out, but the closest he was to get
to the Commonwealth Games was as an official in the Classification Office for
the smallbore events at the Edinburgh Games in 1986. He's not bitter about
it though. Much.

However, still in 1973, he qualified for Great Britain's
Pershing match team, travelling to Camp Perry in the USA for the
every-eight-years match, and it was a great experience for him (although the
match was lost). He must have wondered how he could be one of the top 10
shooters in Britain, but not be able to get into Scotland's CG team. He's
been in the GB Dewar team several times and was appointed to be the team's
Adjutant in 2002 & '03 then Captain for 2004 & '05: the first Scot to be so
honoured for some years.

He lives for shooting and another contribution Cyril has
made is in the administration of the sport in Scotland. He has held every
official post in the SSRA Council, from Council Member up to Chairman - the only
person to have done that particular grand slam. Currently serving as a
foot-soldier on the Council, he is active in organising SSRA indoor competitions
and helps to run the SSRA Grand Prix events in the summer. He has also acted as
coach to the SSRA Junior and 'B' Squads. He was made a Life Member of the
SSRA in 2000.

To relax, he reads, does Sudokus and goes hill-walking,
with the Lake District a favourite place.

There's life in the old dog yet and at time of writing
(2011) he has definitely not won his last Scotland cap.